Following the
Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 – part of the
Haldane Reforms which restructured the British Army and converted the militia and volunteer battalions into the
Special Reserve and the
Territorial Force – the 4th (Militia) Battalion was disbanded, and at the outbreak of the
First World War in 1914 the Gloucestershire Regiment comprised: • 1st Battalion – assigned to the
3rd Brigade in the
1st Division • 2nd Battalion – deployed to Tianjin, China •
3rd (Reserve) Battalion, Special Reserve – formerly 3rd (Militia) Battalion •
4th (City of Bristol) Battalion, Territorial Force – formerly 1st (City of Bristol) Volunteer Battalion •
5th Battalion, Territorial Force – formerly 2nd Volunteer Battalion •
6th Battalion, Territorial Force – formerly 3rd Volunteer Battalion During the war the regiment raised an additional 18 battalions, and in total 16 battalions of the Gloucestershire Regiment saw active service in France and Flanders, Italy, Gallipoli, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia and Salonika.
Regular Army The 1st Battalion was deployed to France in August 1914 and saw action on the
Western Front. It suffered its first casualties at Landrecies on 26 August 1914 during the
retreat from Mons, and sustained further losses in September during the
First Battle of the Aisne. The battalion entered the
First Battle of Ypres on 19 October 1914 with 26 officers and 970 other ranks, played a pivotal role in the defence of Langemarck, was called upon several times to counter-attack against enemy breakthroughs and, by the time of its relief four weeks later, had been reduced to 2 officers and 100 other ranks. In December 1914, it fought in the Defence of Festubert, and the next month in the Defence of Givenchy. Later in 1915, the battalion saw action in the
Battle of Aubers Ridge and the
Battle of Loos, and it was active during the
Somme offensive in 1916 during the Battles of
Bazentin and
Pozières, and in an
attack on High Wood. {{Quote box Early in 1917, the 1st Division moved south of the Somme, and the 1st Battalion participated in the advance to the
Hindenburg Line. In July, the division was allocated to
Operation Hush, a planned seaborne invasion that was later cancelled, and the only significant action the 1st Battalion saw in 1917 was in November, on the last day of the
Second Battle of Passchendaele. On 18 April 1918, during the Battle of Béthune, an engagement in the
Battle of the Lys, the battalion earned high praise and 33 awards for gallantry when it repulsed an attack by four enemy regiments that had turned the Glosters' flank and, in echoes of the Battle of Alexandria, forced them to fight back to back. The battalion saw action again in September and October on the Hindenburg Line in the Battles of
Épehy and
St Quentin Canal. The 1st Battalion saw its last action of the war on 4 November 1918 in the
Battle of the Sambre, where it helped capture Catillon and the crossing over the Sambre canal, some from the scene of its first casualties over four years previously. The 2nd Battalion returned from Tianjin in November 1914 and landed in France the next month as part of the
81st Brigade in the
27th Division. At the end of 1915, the 27th Division was transferred to
XVI Corps of the
British Salonika Army on the
Macedonian front, and the 2nd Battalion occupied positions west of Lake Beshik (modern day Lake Volvi, Greece). In July 1916, XVI Corps took over the line of the
River Struma, and for the next two years the battalion was involved in operations along the Struma valley, from November 1916 as part of the
82nd Brigade. It was a relatively quiet sector, and although the battalion was involved in attacks across the Struma in September, October and December 1916 – the last costing the battalion 114 casualties – and conducted a number of raids in 1917, sickness was more of a threat than enemy action. In July 1918, the 27th Division was transferred to
XII Corps south-west of
Dojran, and the capture of the Roche Noire salient on 1 September, at a cost of 89 casualties, was the last action of the 2nd Battalion in the war.
Special Reserve The Special Reserve mobilised for their twin tasks of home defence and organising Reservists, Special Reservists and later new recruits as reinforcements for the Regular battalions serving overseas. 3rd (Reserve) Battalion served in the
Thames–
Medway Garrison for the whole war. It also formed the
11th (Reserve) Battalion to carry out the same reinforcement role for the '
Kitchener's Army' battalions. In 1916 it became part of the
Training Reserve, but the training staff retained their Glosters badges.
Territorial Force {{Quote box Each of the Territorial Force battalions volunteered for service overseas and raised a second battalion, the six battalions being numbered
1/4th,
2/4th,
1/5th,
2/5th,
1/6th, and
2/6th. The original territorial battalions also raised a third battalion each in 1915 as home-based reserves, though in 1916 these were merged to form the
4th (City of Bristol) Reserve Battalion. Another home-based territorial battalion, the 17th, was raised in 1917.
First-line territorials The first-line territorials proceeded to France in March 1915 as part of the
48th (South Midland) Division; the 1/4th and 1/6th Battalions in the
144th Brigade, and the 1/5th Battalion in the
145th Brigade. The division moved again in July, to Ypres, where the territorials fought in engagements of the
Battle of Passchendaele; the 1/5th Battalion in the
Battle of Langemarck and the
Battle of Broodseinde, and the 1/4th and 1/6th Battalions in the
action of 22 August 1917 and the
Battle of Poelcappelle. Total losses to the three battalions at Passchendaele numbered 1,186 men. In December 1917, the 48th Division transferred to Italy, where the battalions were weakened by an outbreak of influenza. In June 1918, the 1/5th and 1/6th Battalions were in action during the
Second Battle of the Piave River, and the 1/4th and 1/6th Battalions fought their last actions of the war in the
Battle of Vittorio Veneto at the beginning of November. Meanwhile, the 1/5th Battalion was transferred in September 1918 to the
75th Brigade of the
25th Division and returned to France. In October, it fought in the capture of the Beaurevoir Line during the Battle of St Quentin Canal, and in the
Battle of the Selle. During the latter, the battalion was held up for nearly four hours until Private
Francis George Miles went forward alone and knocked out two enemy machine-gun positions, for which action he was awarded the
Victoria Cross (VC). The final action of the 1/5th Battalion came in November, during the Battle of the Sambre.
Second-line territorials The second-line territorials were raised in September 1914 and remained in the UK until they moved to France in May 1916 as part of
61st (2nd South Midland) Division; the 2/4th and 2/6th Battalions in
183rd Brigade, and the 2/5th Battalion in the
184th Brigade. In March and April 1917, the three battalions saw action in the advance to the Hindenburg Line south of the Somme. The 61st Division moved to Ypres in July, and all three battalions fought near Gheluvelt in the Battle of Passchendaele the following month, when the 2/4th Battalion suffered particularly badly with over 200 casualties. In early December, during the
Battle of Cambrai, a heavy German counter-attack forced both the 2/4th and 2/6th Battalions out of their positions in the front line at La Vacquerie, south-west of Cambrai, reducing the 2/4th Battalion to two companies and inflicting casualties of 16 officers and 308 other ranks on the 2/6th Battalion. In February 1918, the 2/4th and 2/6th Battalions were disbanded and their men distributed to the 2/5th Battalion and the 24th
Entrenching Battalion. At the end of March, 10 days of fighting, retreating and digging-in near St. Quentin reduced the 2/5th Battalion to 150 men during
Operation Michael, the opening phase of the
German spring offensive. The 61st Division was transferred north to help reinforce First Army in April, and the 2/5th Battalion fought a number of actions south-west of Merville during the Battle of the Lys. In August, the battalion attempted to force a bridgehead across a stream in Nieppe Forest, west of Merville, and fought on 1 September during the advance to the River Lys. The battalion was in battle again on 30 September at Fleurbaix, south-west of Armentières, and saw its last action of the war on 1 and 2 November during the
Battle of Valenciennes.
New Army As volunteers answered
Lord Kitchener's call to arms, ten
New Army battalions, the 7th to the 16th, were added to the regiment's establishment between 1914 and 1916. Three of them, the
11th, 15th and 16th, were home-based reserve battalions which later transferred to the Training Reserve.
7th Battalion The 7th Battalion was formed in Bristol in August 1914. It sailed to the island of Lemnos in June 1915 as part of the
39th Brigade in the
13th (Western) Division 8th Battalion The 8th Battalion was raised in Bristol in September 1914. It arrived in France in July 1915 as part of the
57th Brigade in the
19th (Western) Division In 1917, the 8th Battalion saw action in June during the
Battle of Messines, fought two minor actions in July near Oosttaverne, south of Ypres, and was involved in the
Battle of the Menin Road Ridge in August. The battalion was next in action on the evening of 21 March 1918, the first day of the German Spring Offensive, when the Germans captured Doignies. Unable to recapture the village, the battalion blocked any further enemy progress until the morning of 23 March, when German forces broke through on the left and threatened to outflank it. Company A fought to the last man covering the battalion's withdrawal, for which action the company commander, Captain
Manley Angell James, was awarded the VC. By the time the 19th Division withdrew to Doullens on 28 March the battalion had suffered 323 casualties. In April, the battalion fought in three engagements of the Battle of the Lys: the Battles of Messines, Bailleul and First Kemmel. The following month, the 19th Division's parent unit,
IX Corps, was transferred to the French Sixth Army. The division was supposed to rest and re-organise in a quiet sector, but on 27 May the Germans launched a major attack, ensnaring the 8th Battalion in the
Third Battle of the Aisne. The battalion saw its last action in October, during the Battle of the Selle, and was disbanded in May 1919.
9th Battalion The 9th Battalion was formed in Bristol in September 1914 and reached France in September 1915 as part of the
78th Brigade in the
26th Division.
10th Battalion {{Quote box The 10th Battalion was raised in September 1914 in Bristol, but was recruited mainly by volunteers from Cheltenham. It crossed to France in August 1915 and replaced one of the Guards battalions in the
1st Brigade of the
1st Division. It saw its first action on 25 September during the Battle of Loos when, as one of the brigade's assault battalions, it succeeded in carrying the German front line at the cost of all but 60 of its men. On 23 July 1916, during the Battle of Pozières, the battalion attacked the German line east of the village, and was involved in two further attacks in the same area in August, all without success. The battalion's last action of the war came on 9 September, in a failed attack on High Wood which cost it 122 casualties. In 1917, the 1st Division was allocated to Operation Hush, and when that was cancelled the 10th battalion moved to the Ypres area. It was disbanded in February 1918 and its men distributed among the regiment's 1st and 8th Battalions and the 13th Entrenching Battalion.
12th Battalion (Bristol's Own) The 12th Battalion was raised in Bristol in August 1914 by the Citizen's Recruiting Committee. It was taken over by the
War Office in June 1915 and left for France in November as part of the
95th Brigade in the
5th Division. and on 25 September during the
Battle of Morval. On 8 May 1917, during the
Battle of Arras, the battalion was practically annihilated with the loss of 296 men at Fresnoy, and it did not see action again until 4 October in the Battle of Broodseinde. In December, the 5th Division was transferred to Italy, where it went into the line along the River Piave, but the battalion saw little action beyond patrolling. The division returned to France in April 1918, occupying positions in the line near Nieppe Forest, and the battalion saw action on 25 April and 28 June, both times successfully advancing the front line. Its last action came during the
Second Battle of Bapaume, where it suffered some 100 casualties on 21 August but succeeded in capturing
Irles on 23 August. On 6 October, the battalion was disbanded and its men distributed among the other units of the 5th Division.
13th Battalion (Forest of Dean) The 13th Battalion was raised in December 1914 at Malvern by
Sir Henry Webb and recruited from the miners of the Forest of Dean, South Wales and the Durham coalfields. In July 1915, it was taken over by the War Office and went to France in March 1916 as divisional pioneers to the
39th Division.
14th Battalion (West of England) The 14th Battalion was a
bantam unit of volunteers from Bristol and Birmingham who had previously been rejected for service because of their short height. It was raised in April 1915 by the Citizen's Recruiting Committee, adopted by the War Office in June 1915, and departed for France in January 1916 as part of the
105th Brigade in the
35th Division. The battalion went into the line in March, where the men's first task was to raise the height of the
firing step, and its first significant action came on 8 June, when it conducted a large raid south-east of Neuve Chapelle. In July, following the
capture of Trônes Wood by the 18th Division during the Battle of Bazentin, the battalion moved into the line at the northern end of the wood where, on 19 July, it suffered 107 casualties to enemy artillery. On 21 August 1917, while in the line near Épehy, the Germans attacked one of the battalion's bombing posts. Although his bombing party were driven back, Second-Lieutenant
Hardy Falconer Parsons remained and prevented the enemy from entering the trenches, for which act he was posthumously awarded the VC. The battalion fought in the action of 22 October 1917 during the Battle of Passchendaele, and saw its last action on 4 February 1918, when it successfully attacked a fortified farm in the Ypres sector. Seven days later the battalion was disbanded and its men transferred to the 13th Battalion.
18th Battalion The 18th battalion was raised in 1918 from a cadre of the 5th Battalion
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, and decamped to France in August 1918 as part of the
49th Brigade in the
16th Division. It went into action on 11 September, when it successfully assaulted the Railway Triangle west of Auchy, and saw its last action on 18 September, when a German attack drove A Company from its forward posts. The battalion was disbanded in June 1919.
Fifth Gloucester Gazette The
Fifth Gloucester Gazette was a trench journal published from the front lines by the men of the 1/5th Battalion. The first issue appeared on 12 April 1915 and foreshadowed more famous trench journals such as
The Wipers Times. It ran for 25 issues, the last of which appeared in January 1919. After the war it was republished as a compilation titled
The Fifth Gloucester Gazette a chronicle, serious and humorous, of the Battalion while serving with the British Expeditionary Force. The gazette featured jokes, poetry, short stories, news and satirical adverts. In October 1916
The Times Literary Supplement hailed it as "the oldest and most literary of the British trench journals". The gazette was regarded so highly due in part to the efforts of famous war poet and founding contributor
F. W. Harvey, who published 77 poems in it while serving with the 1/5th. Five of Harvey's poems were included in the 1917 anthology of war poetry,
The Muse in Arms, alongside poems by
Siegfried Sassoon,
Robert Graves and
Rupert Brooke. The anthology also featured the poetry of Lieutenant Cyril Winterbotham – who served in the 1/5th Battalion and edited the gazette until he was killed in action on 27 August 1916 – and Harvey's pre-war friend
Ivor Gurney, who served in the 2/5th Battalion.
War's end All second-line territorial and New Army battalions had been disbanded and the regiment returned to its pre-war establishment by the end of 1919. Close to 40,000 men are believed to have fought with the regiment in the war, of which 8,100 lost their lives, and the regiment was awarded 72 different battle honours. The regular battalions lost 1,400 men killed, 1,044 of them from the 1st Battalion, and were awarded 39 battle honours. The territorial battalions lost 2,542 men killed and received 60 battle honours, and the New Army battalions suffered 3,954 deaths and won 84 battle honours. Home-based reserve battalions and the regimental depot accounted for 204 deaths. Four awards of the VC were made to men serving with the regiment during the war, along with 47
Distinguished Service Orders (DSO), 188
Distinguished Conduct Medals (DCM), 265
Military Crosses (MC) and 747
Military Medals (MM). A fifth VC was awarded to an officer of the regiment attached to another unit. ==Inter-war years==